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Poetry Day Ireland: Henry Shefflin by Enda Wyley

Poet Enda Wyley (Pic: Mark Granier)
Poet Enda Wyley (Pic: Mark Granier)

Poetry Day Ireland is an annual island-wide celebration of poetry which invites the nation to read, write, and share a poem on the day.

Presented by Poetry Ireland, the theme for this year is "Good Sports" celebrating the good sport in all of us, the drive to give it a go or to have a crack at it.

Read Enda Wyley's poem Henry Shefflin below.


Henry Shefflin

Portrait by Gerry Davis,

The National Gallery of Ireland

And who would not want to be

Henry Shefflin, turned from home,

standing straight-backed, head-high

his feet firmly apart on the Ballyhale pitch,

a hurley swung over his shoulder, the other

hand casual in his trouser pocket?

No muddied shorts and jersey now–

he is king of these grounds, a suited monarch

of all about him, facing the steely-eyed future

his past a sliotar struck far across the field.

Centre of all things, he likes to gaze up

the elegant stairs to Canova's 'Amorino,’

and is older than this marble prince, though

no less determined, both with hands raised–

one to a bow, the other to the hurley’s handle.

Gerry Davis (b.1985), 'Portrait of Henry Shefflin', 2017. © Gerry Davis.
Photo © National Gallery of Ireland

Find out more about Poetry Day Ireland here.

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